What does mcgonagall teach




















McGonagall marches onto the Quidditch pitch to cancel the Gryffindor versus Hufflepuff match. It transpires that two more Petrified students have been discovered. McGonagall bumps into Harry and Ron while they are on the way to Moaning Myrtle's bathroom to ask Myrtle about her death. McGonagall is very angry until Harry lies and says they were on the way to visit Hermione in the hospital wing. She gives them permission to visit her. McGonagall is very surprised to see them all, so much so that she is seen to be taking steadying gasps and clutching her chest.

When they see that the Fat Lady has disappeared, McGonagall goes to find Filch, to start searching the castle paintings for her. She is frustrated with Hagrid, as he appears to have told a number of people about Sirius Black breaking in to the castle. She supports Dumbledore's refusal to allow Dementors in the castle grounds, as it would hinder teaching at the school. She tells the table that Black and James Potter were the ringleaders of their gang; both bright, but both troublemakers.

She is remorseful when Fudge reminds them of Peter Pettigrew, another of the Potters' friends, who Fudge reveals was also killed by Black. She was often rather sharp with Peter at school, and regrets that now.

She suggests the group make their way back to the castle, as Fudge is due to dine with Dumbledore. She becomes impatient when Professor Trelawney joins them, wanting to get on with the feast. She is dismissive of Trelawney's fears about having thirteen people at the table, and her supersititon that the first person to rise will be the first to die.

As the meal continues, McGonagall challenges Professor Trelawney, and shows little belief in the Inner Eye that Trelawney claims she has. When Harry and Ron get up from the table together, she sarcastically remarks that unless an axe-man is lying in wait outside the Great Hall, it hardly matters which of them rose first. At one in the morning, McGonagall arrives in the Gryffindor common room and insists that the Quidditch celebrations end and that the students go to bed.

She enters the Gryffindor common room again after the commotion in Ron and Harry's dormitory, angry that the students are still awake. She stares at Ron when he tells her that Sirius Black was in Gryffindor Tower, and asks how he could possibly have got past the portrait hole.

She asks Sir Cadogan if he has recently let a man enter, and is stunned when he says that he has. When she hears that Black had the week's passwords on a piece of paper, she wants to know which student was foolish enough to leave them lying around. Professor McGonagall watches the Quidditch final against Slytherin. She keeps an eye on Lee Jordan as he commentates, but doesn't bother to tell him off for swearing after Malfoy cheats.

She shakes her fist in Malfoy's direction, shouting furiously. McGonagall is thrilled when Gryffindor wins the Quidditch Cup; she makes her way on to the pitch, sobbing and wiping her eyes on an enormous Gryffindor flag. She dashes out of the Great Hall to deal with the poltergeist, skidding on the wet floor and grabbing hold of Hermione to stop herself from falling over. She shouts at Peeves, and orders him to come down immediately, only succeeding when she threatens to summon Professor Dumbledore.

She ushers the remaining students into the Great Hall, and waits to lead the new first-year students into the room. McGonagall leads the first-years into the Great Hall for the Sorting Ceremony; she puts a three-legged stool onto the ground before the students, and places the Sorting Hat on the stool.

After the Hat has recited its song, she unrolls a large scroll, calling the students individually to be sorted. Professor McGonagall is shocked when she sees Professor Moody in the Entrance Hall, controlling a bouncing white ferret. She makes her way down the staircase, her arms full of books, to find out what he is doing. McGonagall is horrified when she realises that the ferret is a student, and runs down the stairs, pulling out her wand and retransfiguring the ferret, Draco Malfoy, into his human form.

McGonagall impresses on Moody that they never use Transfiguration as a punishment, and tells the teacher that at Hogwarts they give detentions, or speak to the offender's Head of house.

She stares anxiously after Draco and Moody as they head towards the dungeons, then waves her hands at her fallen books, making them fly back into her arms.

Professor McGonagall seems oddly tense as the arrival date of the Beauxbatons and Durmstrang delegations grows nearer. She is irritable with the students, and gets cross with Neville after one particularly gruelling Transfiguration lesson. She is irritated when Dumbledore doesn't deny there might have been a fault with the Age Line, knowing that Dumbledore wouldn't have made such a mistake. She thinks the arguments are nonsense - she believes that Harry didn't put his name in the Goblet of Fire himself, and trusts Dumbledore's acceptance that Harry didn't ask another student to enter him.

Professor McGonagall arrives in the Great Hall at lunchtime on the day of the first task to escort Harry to the champions' tent. She looks as anxious as Hermione as they walk; she puts her hand on his shoulder and tells him to keep a cool head during the task. She speaks in a rather shaky voice as she leaves Harry at the entrance of the tent, and wishes him good luck. Professor McGonagall attends the Yule Ball along with the other teachers.

She wears dress robes of red tartan, and has arranged a rather ugly wreath of thistles around the brim of her hat. She instructs the champions to wait on one side of the doors to the Great Hall as everyone else goes inside, as they are to enter the Great Hall in procession when everyone is seated.

She leads the champions into the Great Hall, towards the table at the top of the Great Hall. Professor McGonagall sends Fred and George to fetch Ron and Hermione to her office on the night before the second task. Professor McGonagall allows Harry to use the empty Transfiguration classroom during lunchtimes to practise his spells in the run-up to the third task.

On the morning of the task, McGonagall tells Harry to go to the chamber off the Great Hall, where the families of the champions are waiting to greet them. She is sent by Dumbledore to fetch the black dog waiting in the pumpkin patch by Hagrid's cabin and to take it to Dumbledore's office. She returns afterwards, and is shocked when she sees Barty Crouch Junior lying on the floor of the office instead of Professor Moody.

She listens as Dumbledore questions the young man, astonished by the story he tells. McGonagall is yelling at Fudge, and says that the Minister should never have brought 'it' into the castle. When Dumbledore arrives and asks why she isn't guarding Barty Crouch Junior, she reveals hysterically that there is no reason to guard the prisoner anymore, as he has been given the Dementors' Kiss by the creature brought into Hogwarts by Cornelius Fudge.

She is furious with Fudge for allowing the Kiss to happen, having told the Minister about Crouch Junior acting on Voldemort's orders. She thinks Fudge is a fool for believing that the deaths of Cedric Diggory and Mr Crouch are merely the random work of a lunatic.

McGonagall stands at the edge of the crowd in the Entrance Hall watching the confrontation between Professors Umbridge and Trelawney, looking faintly sick.

She breaks away from the spectators as Professor Trelawney begins to cry, marching up to her and comforting her colleague. She assures Trelawney that she is not going to have to leave Hogwarts. At Dumbledore's request, McGonagall escorts Professor Trelawney up the stairs to the Divination teacher's lodgings, with the assistance of Professor Sprout. When Umbridge mentions the student meeting in the Hog's Head, McGonagall is curious as to how she found out about the meeting, and raises her eyebrows when she realises the deal the Ministry made with the informant Willy Widershins.

McGonagall is horrified when Dumbledore falsely confesses to organising the meeting that evening, but does not attempt to prevent it, and widens her eyes threateningly at Harry to stop him from revealing the truth. She offers to help Dumbledore fight off the Ministry officials if they attempt to arrest him forcibly, but is prevented, reminded by Dumbledore that she is needed at Hogwarts. McGonagall forces Harry and Marietta to the floor to prevent them from being harmed during the skirmish that follows.

When Dumbledore escapes and the Ministry officials regain consciousness, McGonagall escorts Harry and Marietta back to their dormitories. When Susan Bones splinches herself, the teachers converge around her, reattaching her left leg in a puff of purple smoke.

Professor McGonagall attends Dumbledore's funeral by the lake. She sits in the front row of chairs with Rufus Scrimgeour. Played in the films with tremendous faith to the books by Dame Maggie Smith, she is instantly relatable. We've all at some point had that teacher who was tough to the point of getting into arguments, but ultimately fair. Few characters at Hogwarts can ruin someone else in so few words and with such dry wit.

She can also rage out when called for. We're using both the Harry Potter movies and books to get the best of the best from Gryffindor's Head of House. In The Chamber Of Secrets, Gilderoy Lockhart's frequent boasts and inflated sense of grandeur finally get their comeuppance from the biting tongue of McGonagall.

As the 'Monster Of Slytherin' problem reaches its zenith, McGonagall calls Lockhart's constant bluffs in front of everyone. A free rein at last. Minerva is not one to suffer fools, and here she deftly removes one so the real problem can be attended to. McGonagall runs a tight ship and expects her students to arrive on-time for her Transfiguration lessons.

When Harry and Ron are unable to match her punctuality expectations, they're greeted with this succinct assessment.

Potter and yourself into a pocket watch? That way one of you might be on time Or perhaps a map? Without going overboard she instills into the boys their expected duty. It's one of McGonagall's great and indelible attributes that she maintains fairness even when remonstrating. Shortly before the competing school representatives are to arrive, Professor McGonagall is heard exhorting her House to be on its best behaviour. In particular, she requests that Neville Longbottom conceal that he is unable to master even a simple Switching Spell.

Crouch and Ludo Bagman from the Ministry. McGonagall's contribution is limited; when it is suggested that Professor Dumbledore had drawn the age line incorrectly, allowing an underage Harry to enter his own name, McGonagall declares loyally that Dumbledore could not have made a mistake.

McGonagall, appearing tense and somewhat on edge, escorts Harry to the dragon enclosure for the first task, leaving him there with the other Champions. Fourth-year and above will be allowed to attend, as will younger students as their guests. McGonagall privately tells Harry that the Champions and their partners traditionally lead the way into the Ball and to have the first dance. Harry is shocked: he has only a month to find a date, learn to dance, and prepare to lead the schools into the ball.

At the Ball, McGonagall takes the four Champions aside to say they will be entering in procession after the other students are seated. It is revealed later that they have been chosen to be charmed and handed over to the Merpeople as "hostages" that the Champions must "rescue" underwater for the Second Task.

Harry, not expecting anyone, remains in the Great Hall until Cedric Diggory , the other Hogwarts Champion, summons him. Weasley and Bill Weasley have come to watch him compete. Professor McGonagall, with Hagrid, Professor Moody, and Professor Flitwick, will patrol the maze's outer perimeter during the Third Task, rescuing anyone who fails the challenges.

When Harry returns from the duel with Voldemort in the graveyard, Moody, against Dumbledore's instructions, escorts Harry to his office. McGonagall wants to send Harry to the Hospital Wing, but Dumbledore overrules her, saying that Harry needs to know what has happened and why. Dumbledore sends McGonagall to fetch a large black dog waiting in Hagrid's pumpkin patch and take it to his office.

After Barty's confession, Professor Dumbledore leaves McGonagall to guard him, and takes Harry to his office to see Sirius Black and discuss that night's events. Harry is then taken to the Hospital Wing, where Madam Pomfrey gives him a dreamless sleep potion. Professor McGonagall's noisy arrival awakens Harry. She reports that the Dementor that accompanied Cornelius Fudge to Hogwarts instantly administered the "Kiss" to Barty Crouch, sucking out his soul. Barty can no longer tell anyone anything.

We learn that Professor McGonagall is a member of the Order of the Phoenix when Harry, then staying at the Order's headquarters sees her arriving, looking somehow odd in Muggle clothes. She seems to be among the few teachers able to listen to Dolores Umbridge 's droning "welcome speech". On the first day of classes, Professor McGonagall hands out timetables. He is given a note that he must take to McGonagall, where he learns he has been given detention every day for a week.

McGonagall asks if he had understood Umbridge's welcoming speech, and Harry suggests it means that the Ministry was going to be taking a more active hand in running Hogwarts. McGonagall comments that she is glad Harry at least listens to Hermione.

She then warns Harry to be cautious around Umbridge, especially in keeping his temper, to give her the least possible reason to punish Harry. While leaving detention, Harry runs into Ron, who notices his cut and bleeding hand. Ron demands that Harry tell McGonagall, though Harry stubbornly demurs, insisting it is a personal issue between him and Umbridge now.

When Harry gets another week's detention, McGonagall additionally penalizes him House points, for failing to heed her advice to avoid antagonizing Umbridge. When Hedwig is injured while delivering Sirius' message to Harry, he takes her to Professor Grubbly-Plank in the staff room. Professor McGonagall is also there, and she warns Harry that all communication channels in and out of Hogwarts are likely under surveillance.

Draco Malfoy's taunts combined with an after-the-whistle Bludger from Crabbe result in a physical fight after a Quidditch match against Slytherin. Harry and George Weasley are called into McGonagall's office, where McGonagall scolds them severely and gives each of them a week's worth of detentions. However, Umbridge steps in with a new Educational Decree and alters the punishment even further, banning the two boys including Fred, even though he was not part of the scuffle from playing Quidditch permanently, to McGonagall's further fury.

Just before Christmas, Harry dreams he is a snake attacking someone in a long hallway. Waking up, he tells Ron that his father is being attacked and needs urgent help. After hearing Harry's story, Dumbledore sends two portraits, Dilys and Everard , to investigate.

When the portraits return, reporting that the man was found but is badly hurt, Dumbledore sends McGonagall to fetch the other Weasley children. McGonagall asks about contacting Molly , but Dumbledore says that is Fawkes' job.

She evidently is successful, as neither appears in Dumbledore's office before the Weasley children and Harry have left. Dobby warns Harry that Umbridge is on her way to catch "Dumbledore's Army". Harry alone is captured, and Umbridge escorts him to Professor Dumbledore's office. Marietta Edgecombe , a student, has also been brought as a witness. Umbridge claims Harry held an illegal meeting at the Hog's Head. When she says Willy Widdershins provided her the information, McGonagall comments that she had wondered how he had gotten off so lightly for all those regurgitating toilets.

When Fudge attempts to have Dumbledore arrested, a bursting white light knocks out him and the other Ministry officials. McGonagall has pushed Harry and Marietta safely to the floor. Dumbledore makes sure the three are unharmed, then departs. Harry meets with McGonagall to discuss his career plans to become an Auror, only to find Umbridge is also there. Umbridge continually interrupts McGonagall, claiming Harry's "criminal" record will prevent his becoming an Auror. McGonagall, outraged, vows to do everything possible to help him achieve his goal.

Harry leaves as their argument escalates. With Dumbledore's departure, as well as Fred and George Weasley's exit, the school has become largely unmanageable. In silent rebellion, the teachers do nothing to help Umbridge regain control. At one point, McGonagall walks, apparently uncaring, past Peeves as he unscrews a crystal chandelier, though she might have told him that it turned the other way.

Umbridge, accompanied by multiple Aurors, attempts to sack Hagrid. Apparently attracted by the confusion and wand flashes, McGonagall runs to Hagrid's aid, but is simultaneously hit by four Stunners. When Harry envisions Voldemort torturing Sirius Black, he attempts to speak with McGonagall, the only Order member he can think of, but she has been taken to St. Mungo's Hospital. As a result, Harry attempts to contact Sirius directly by using Professor Umbridge's fireplace, and is caught.

Harry, distraught over Sirius' death, nearly gets into a duel with Draco Malfoy, who blames Harry for his father being sentenced to Azkaban prison. Professor Snape intervenes, then prepares to penalize Harry House points, only to discover the Gryffindor hourglass is empty. Professor McGonagall happens to return from St.

Mungo's, recovered but still physically weak and using a walking stick. She sends Draco and his cronies off, then awards House points to all students who participated in the battle at the Ministry. She then subtracts the points that Snape intended to deduct. When Peeves chases Umbridge out of Hogwarts, McGonagall is delighted to hear of her ousting, but is disappointed as she is unable to get outside to cheer Peeves on without her walking stick, which Peeves is using.

At the beginning of the year, Professor McGonagall hands out timetables to the sixth-year students. The process is complicated because the courses that students can take are limited by their O. Hermione gets her courses straight away. When she consults Neville about his results, she tells him that he can take Herbology with an 'Outstanding' O. However, he cannot take Transfiguration with only an 'Acceptable' O.

While Neville is reluctant, saying that his grandmother believes Charms is a soft option, McGonagall comments that Augusta having failed her Charms O. She then tells Neville that it is high time Augusta appreciated her grandson for what he already was rather than what she wants him to be. Harry's lost hope to become an Auror revives when Professor McGonagall tells him that Professor Slughorn is happy to accept students into N. Potions classes with an 'Exceeds Expectations' O.

Both Harry and Ron enroll. McGonagall has Professor Snape inspect it. Harry, over Ron and Hermione's objections, states that Draco Malfoy must be involved.

McGonagall says that Draco was serving detention in her office during the attack. We see McGonagall briefly in the Quidditch match following Ron's birthday.



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